Facebook Makes German Marketing Push as Hate Speech Law Bites

A giant logo is seen at Facebook's headquarters in London, Britain, December 4, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville

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By Emma ThomassonBERLIN (Reuters)

Facebook (FB.O) is making a big marketing drive in Germany just as the country starts to implement tough regulations designed to clamp down on online hate speech

The U.S. corporation has historically done little advertising of its own but has plastered billboards across Germanywith posters featuring ordinary people expressing their concerns about the site, along with explanations of how to use it better.

“Germany is not as highly penetrated a market as we’d like it to be. A lot of it has to do with cultural norms,” chief marketing officer Gary Briggs told a tech summit organized by Wells Fargo bank earlier this month.

The Facebook campaign comes as Germany prepares to enforce a new law which could impose fines of up to 50 million euros ($59 million) on social media sites that fail to remove hateful messages promptly.

Germans have embraced ecommerce – the country is Amazon’s second biggest market after the United States – but they are much more reticent about social media than many other nationalities.

Public concern about rising hate speech since the arrival of more than a million asylum seekers in Germany over recent years has added to longer standing anxieties born of the country’s 20th century history.

Germans closely guard privacy and personal data, partly due to extensive surveillance by East Germany’s Stasi secret police until the 1989 collapse of communism and, before that, by the Nazi-era Gestapo. Facebook has put a particular focus on privacy in its latest German campaign.

One poster pictures a woman with the comment: “I once posted something that I should never, never, never have shared”

Underneath is the image of a trash can and a Facebook-style blue button marked “Delete it and it disappears”.

Data protection campaigners question whether users can delete personal information from their social media accounts as easily as the Facebook campaign suggests.

Privacy questions have also attracted the attention of Germany’s cartel office. In a preliminary report, the office found on Tuesday that Facebook held a dominant position and questioned its collection of third-party data on its users.

Facebook’s head of data protection Yvonne Cunnane disputed the report, calling it inaccurate. She said the firm plans to introduce more controls as well as more education about how Facebook protects data and security in the coming months.

The campaign “Make Facebook Your Facebook” started in 2016 and was relaunched in July. It has reached a new intensity in recent weeks, with the ads also featuring in top newspapers and magazines, on television and on Facebook itself.

About 41 percent of Germans have active Facebook accounts, well below the 66 percent in the United States, 64 percent in Britain and 56 percent in France, according to a survey by social media agencies Hootsuite and We Are Social.

“Germans are in general more reserved and privacy has a bigger value,” said Rolf Schwartmann, professor of media law at the Cologne University of Applied Sciences.

A Facebook spokeswoman said there was no link between the new law and the marketing campaign, adding that hate speech was just one of several areas of concern it was trying to address.